Public Forum
Doctrine
A. Categories of Public Forums
1) Traditional or Quintessential Public Forums
2) Designated Public Forums
3) Nonpublic Forums
B. Traditional or Quintessential Public Forums
1) Examples – Streets and Parks
(These are places that have been made available for expression
since time immemorial.)
2) Guaranteed Access Rights
(The public has guaranteed rights of access to such places and,
therefore, the government cannot close off this access
completely.)
3) Content Neutral Time, Place, and Manner Regulations
(The government can regulate access to the streets and parks by
enacting time, place, and manner regulations. To be constitutional
such regulations must be content-neutral, must be narrowly
tailored to accomplish an important governmental interest, and
must leave open ample alternative avenues for expression. This is
a version of the intermediate scrutiny test.)
4) Content-Based Regulations Evaluated Under Strict Scrutiny Test
(The government can regulate access to the streets and parks based
on the content of the regulated speech, but only if it has
selected a narrowly tailored, least restrictive method of
achieving a compelling governmental interest. Content-based
regulations can be based on subject matter or viewpoint. Viewpoint
discrimination is almost always unconstitutional.)
C. Designated Public Forums
1) This category consists of government property that the
government has intentionally opened up for the purpose of either
all or certain kinds of First Amendment activities by members of
the public or by a particular segment of the public such as
students in a designated forum created by the school they attend.
2) The key here is that the government’s creation of a designated
public forum is a voluntary act. Moreover, the creation of a
designated forum is not permanent. The government is free to
eliminate forums that it voluntarily creates.
3) The government can regulate access to designated public forums
in the same manner as traditional public forums by adopting
reasonable time, place and manner regulations and by adopting
content-based restrictions that satisfy strict scrutiny.
4) Designated public forums may be unlimited or limited public
forums. Most such voluntary forums are limited in some way and are
referred to as limited public forums.
5) The government can limit a designated forum by speaker
identity, subject matter, time, etc. This means if the forum is
limited by speaker identity, for example, that the government
property is a designated forum as to some speakers (those within
the described limits) and a nonpublic forum as to other speakers
(those outside the described limits).
6) In evaluating whether the limits imposed by the government on a
limited public forum are constitutional, a court will consider
whether the limits are reasonable in light of the purpose of the
forum and are not based on viewpoint. Therefore, some subject
matter restrictions will be constitutional if they are designed to
preserve the purpose of the forum, but that deferential standard
does not extend to viewpoint restrictions. Viewpoint restrictions
are only constitutional if they satisfy strict scrutiny review.
D. How to Identify a Designated Public Forum
1) To identify whether property qualifies as a designated public
forum, courts principally examine the policy and practice of the
government (to determine if it intended to designate a place as a
public forum);
2) Courts also look at the nature of the property and its
compatibility with expressive activity (to discern the
government’s intent);
3) A court will not determine that government property to which a
speaker seeks access is a designated public forum solely because
the government has allowed selective access to the forum (e.g., by
allowing it to be used by occasional speakers); and
4) Designated public forums may be limited and selective access
may only be allowed for those who fall within the limits of the
forum.
E. Nonpublic Forums
1) Nonpublic forum is the residual category for government
property that is neither a traditional nor a designated public
forum.
2) Nonpublic forums can be regulated by the use of reasonable
regulations that do not discriminate on the basis of viewpoint.
Since it is easier for the government to satisfy this standard
than it is to satisfy the standards that apply to traditional and
designated public forums, the government will try and classify
government property as a nonpublic forum whenever possible.
F. Government Speech
1) Designated public forums involve access by private speakers and
not just by the government itself.
2) If the only speech in a potential forum is speech by the
government itself, it is not a designated public forum.
3) Government property used by the government for its own speech
does not become a nonpublic forum.
4) The government as a speaker may, of course, express viewpoints,
and need not present a balanced treatment of alternative
viewpoints.
5) First Amendment limitations that apply to nonforums do not
apply to the government's own speech which is not subject to First
Amendment limitations.